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PopeWatch: From Russia With Love

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Sandro Magister at his blog Chiesa comments on the meeting between the Pope and the Russian Patriarch:

 
ROME, February 12, 2016 – The meeting with Russian patriarch Kirill at the Havana airport is a perfect snapshot of the geopolitics of Pope Francis. He dodges obstacles instead of confronting them. He puts the priority and urgency on person-to-person contact, as in a field hospital, where no one waits for the war to end first.

In Ukraine, in the Middle East, there is real war, and with Russia as lead actor. But for Francis the embrace with the patriarch of Moscow is worth more, as a sign of peace, than standing with the Catholic populations of those regions.

The case of Ukraine is exemplary. The Russian Orthodox Church has its birthplace there, but it also feels besieged by the millions of Eastern-rite faithful who have passed under obedience to Rome, the “uniates,” as they disparagingly call them. While in return the Byzantine-rite Catholics now see the Russian Orthodox as their enemy and invader.

So then, Francis has always done all he could not to annoy the patriarchate of Moscow and the imperial politics of Vladimir Putin, even at the cost of sowing the strongest disappointment among the bishops, clergy, and faithful of the Catholic Church in the region.

He has called “fratricidal war,” on both sides, a conflict that for Ukrainian Catholics is pure aggression on the part of Russia. And he readily agreed with Kirill’s proposal of a meeting neither in the East nor in the West, but in Cuba, defined as “neutral” ground.

Which in reality has nothing neutral or free about it. Where the prison population, in which political prisoners abound, “is among the most numerous in the world,” according to the latest estimates of the bishop of Pinar del Rio, who is responsible for their pastoral care. From which they continue to flee by the thousands, crossing Central American to the United States, unless they are stopped at the border of pro-Castro Nicaragua.

When pope Jorge Mario Bergoglio went to Cuba last September, he did not perform even one of the many gestures of “mercy” that he sows all over. Not one word for the thousands of refugees swallowed up by the sea. No request for the release of political prisoners. No show of kindness for their mothers, wives, sisters, arrested by the dozen during those same days.

We now know that the meeting with Kirill in Cuba was already on the agenda of both back then, as well as being on that of Raúl Castro and of Putin himself.

In the joint declaration signed by Francis and Kirill at the Havana airport, every theological dispute is set aside, while at the forefront is their shared suffering over the Christian victims, both Orthodox and Catholic, in Syria and in the whole Middle East.

Here as well the geopolitics of Francis excels more in passion than in rational calculation. There was a stir over the day of prayer and fasting proclaimed by the pope in September of 2013 to avert any Western military operation in Syria. Putin exulted over Barack Obama’s refusal to topple the Shiite regime in Damascus, and the Christian Churches in Syria breathed a sigh of relief as well, having in the despot Assad a self-interested protector.

But when the Islamic State then spread out with slaughter in its wake, and the bishops of Iraq and Kurdistan called for Western military intervention on the ground, Francis turned a deaf ear to them.

Today the Holy See’s position on the chessboard of the Middle East is not neutral, but decidedly biased. And it is all the more so since Putin, declining to strike the Islamic State, has reinforced his leadership role with the pro-Assad Shiite front, in what large segments of the Russian Orthodox Church are calling a “holy war.”

In effect, Vatican diplomacy gets along much better with the dominant Shiite axis of Iran, especially after the nuclear agreement, than with the Sunni world, the main leadership center of which, Cairo’s Al-Azhar University, broke off relations with Rome five years ago.

The Russian bombs falling on an Aleppo surrounded by the Shiite troops of Iran, Lebanon, and Assad, with the desperate flight of Sunni civilians, are blessed by the patriarchate of Moscow so dear to the bishop of Rome.

 

Go here to read the rest.  The Russian Orthodox Church has usually been the servant of whoever is ruling Russia, and so it is today.  Pope Francis ignores this as part of his ceaseless effort to make reality conform to his wishes and beliefs.  Besieged Catholics in the Ukraine and the Middle East, under this pontificate the message from the Vatican is clear:  you are on your own.

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ave
ave
Monday, February 15, AD 2016 4:54am

An Argentine shepherd and a Russian shepherd walk into a Cuban bar named el Lobo….

Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
Monday, February 15, AD 2016 8:06am

“Vatican diplomacy gets along much better with the dominant Shiite axis of Iran…”
.
The same is true of the Administration of Barack Hussein Obama.
.
Exactly how is the Pope NOT like Obama?

Penguin Fan
Penguin Fan
Monday, February 15, AD 2016 11:02am

Well, the Roman Pontiff got his meeting with the Moscow Patriarch. How many decades, how many centuries, has this meeting been desired? And now, it has happened…..in the tropical gulag established with Russian Communist assistance. See how The world jhas changed?
The Roman Pontiff was again silent on oppression of Cubans…no surprise there.

Michael Paterson-Seymour
Michael Paterson-Seymour
Monday, February 15, AD 2016 1:10pm

Russia’s position is easy to understand.
It wants stability in Syria, to protect its own interests there and it believes Assad, with support from Iran can deliver it
As for the Sunni-Shiite conflict, Russia is far more worried about Sunni Jihadists in the Caucuses than it is about Shiites. Whilst a quarter of the population of the Russian Federation is Muslim, virtually none of them are Shiites.
The Shiite Crescent, Damascus, Baghdad, Tehran and now Sana’a form a convenient buffer on its Southern flank.
What the Vatican gets out of it, I don’t know.

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